Okay, the good news is that now I have a wonderful idea for the title, but its after three pages of logging I bought myself as a gift for the first month of training the accu measure (BF counter). Now, I know that, in my constitution, most of my bf is stored in my belly and upper legs anyway... but reading 21 percent BF really was discouraging today. Since I began with 2 kg more, it seems I had around 24 percent to begin.

So, now this blog shall be titled "From 24 to 9 percent!" Lets give this day some optimism..

i am curious as to know of why some exercises are getting worse rather than flat lining or improving.

I looked up your previous workout; is it just because you are trying to change the amount of reps but even so, if anything, you should be able to at least maintain or even increase the weight. Your poundages look okay but you said 'the stuff worse than last week'.

Usually when you first start out everything just continues to improve and even down the road, the worst that could happen is you flat line until you switch stuff up, unless:

1. you are overtraining
2. You're losing an exceptional amount of weight and some of it is muscle, which is inevitable.

I think it's hard to overstimulate and overtrain when you first start and I feel that when you first start out, even if you are leaning out, you still are gaining muscle at a much more rapid rate so muscle it evens itself out.

I wonder what could be going on or am i misinterpreting what you meant to say...

either way, keep up the good work, I like your journal and a day off here and there is ok, I do it too.

Thanks for the input and advice I received for my latest post Well, I do hope the red exercises will be as rare as possible, but I am a pessimist at heart, so I felt like adding the color for that as well. BTW, the two red exercises of last time were done worse partly because I (ignorantly) thought isolated exercises would be good for my strength as well.
I informed myself somehow in this last month, learning from scratch about what is actually useful and what is gibberish, so I got mostly input that curls and the like just get you a good body for display. While not disliking the idea I think that the decreasing reps (six and four) would not have done much anyway, so I cut the exercise to only three reps of 8.

I couldnt manage a whole series of 8 of 12 kg, when I was used to have four reps with that, so I cut that weight off. Was I misinformed, or would the change of reps bring me worse results?

I guess I should have informed myself sooner, but I definitely intend on going to the gym with the thought of growing better no matter what!

Im planning my second "stage" more thoroughly. I will post a planned schedule tomorrow..

29/02/08

Cardio day

12 minutes HIIT on the treadmill diff.8/12. (Some of told me daily interval training would tire my heart and generally bring little results and bad health; what would your opinion be? I prefer it much over jogging at a definite pace.)

30 minutes elliptical cyclette, diff 5/12

Going to hit the gym now!

Having the time of my life.

It's not how many times you fall down that counts - it's how many you stand back up that matters.

Most of this green is probably cause I didnt do nearly as much cardio as I do during the week. But I felt like making a higher standard for myself to beat than the reddish last days program I changed the reps on the shoulder exercise again, as it felt simply easier wih those I had been training with.

Having the time of my life.

It's not how many times you fall down that counts - it's how many you stand back up that matters.

Still greenish, even with the small accident. I will repair that in two days!

Next week I will be in Austria, so I probably
1) will have very little vegan food besides pasta and bread = terrile diet
2) only walking as an exercise, and as my teachers are morbidly obese, that seems to be in doubt as well.

Wish I couldnt go, really. Well, after that Cycle 2 of my cutting will begin!

Having the time of my life.

It's not how many times you fall down that counts - it's how many you stand back up that matters.